2018
DOI: 10.18865/ed.28.2.123
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Will 'Deaths of Despair' among Whites Change How We Talk about Racial/Ethnic Health Disparities?

Abstract: The recent trend of premature death among Whites in the United States has garnered attention in both the popular and academic literature. This attention has focused on the plight of low socioeconomic status Whites in non-urban areas. The population health literature in general and the health disparities literature more specifically has struggled to describe differences in health when White groups present worse health outcomes or worsening trends compared with racial/ethnic minority groups. There remain many op… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(14 citation statements)
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References 19 publications
(32 reference statements)
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“…Some economists have interpreted these recent population-level trends to indicate that despair rising from economic stagnation is a shared pathway to suicides, drug poisonings, and death from alcoholic liver disease. Accordingly, they coined the term “deaths of despair” (DoD), 1,3 which quickly captured the attention of scientists, 47 policy makers, 8 and popular media, but also drew criticisms from addiction researchers, 9 racial disparities researchers, 1012 family sociologists, 13 and demographers. 14…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some economists have interpreted these recent population-level trends to indicate that despair rising from economic stagnation is a shared pathway to suicides, drug poisonings, and death from alcoholic liver disease. Accordingly, they coined the term “deaths of despair” (DoD), 1,3 which quickly captured the attention of scientists, 47 policy makers, 8 and popular media, but also drew criticisms from addiction researchers, 9 racial disparities researchers, 1012 family sociologists, 13 and demographers. 14…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite favorable public health gains in some areas and lower suicide rates versus other groups (Figure 1), NHB have the second highest premature mortality after AIAN, seemingly high rates of adult depression relative to other groups [51] often coupled with significant gaps in access to mental health care, and have seen a recent sharp rise (and reversal of trend) in premature mortality across all age groups in those with less than a high school education (similar to NHW in Particularly against the backdrop of polarizing current events, the topics of race, ethnicity, class, culture, and historical or contemporary discrimination, oppression, or trauma, can be especially sensitive issues that are extraordinarily difficult to adequately and comprehensively address, even in the context of health disparities and when authors have only humanitarian intentions. In this light, the controversy and discussion that emerged from the Case and Deaton papers have been very thoroughly, thoughtfully, and expertly covered in great detail by others, and we refer readers there for those discussions [44] (and see additional relevant discussion in [37]).…”
Section: Driving Forcesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In two papers that generated vigorous discussion and mild controversy (expertly discussed in [44]), Anne Case and Angus Deaton, the 2015 Nobel Laureate for Economics, highlighted the unprecedented rise in midlife mortality among socioeconomically disadvantaged middle-aged NHW Americans [45,46]. These researchers linked rising midlife mortality to a decline in the economic prospects for the NHW working class during an era of rising income inequality in the USA.…”
Section: Driving Forcesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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